4.7 Article

Taking into account greenhouse gas emissions of electric vehicles for transportation de-carbonization

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 155, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2021.112353

Keywords

Greenhouse gas; Vehicle fuel consumption; economy regulation; Well-to-wheels; Plug-in electric vehicles

Funding

  1. Aramco Services Company
  2. U.S. Department of Energy

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The development of plug-in electric vehicle market is influenced by international regulations, including super-credits and leakage effects. Due to these effects, sales of plug-in electric vehicles in China, the U.S., and the EU will result in greenhouse gas emissions increases of over 1 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent. Future regulatory designs should incentivize the development of new technologies while also reducing the risk of emissions increases elsewhere.
Plug-in electric vehicles pose great potentials to de-carbonize the transportation sector. To jump-start their market deployment, regulations in China, the U.S., and the European Union provide preferential treatments, including counting a single plug-in electric vehicle with multipliers (super-credits) in calculating sales-averaged emissions (regulation dilution effect) and considering zero emissions for the electric mileage by omitting electricity generation emissions (regulation leakage effect). This study quantifies greenhouse gas emission increases due to these two effects in the three markets. We show that plug-in electric vehicles sold in 2012-2025 in the three markets will result in greenhouse gas emission increases of more than 1 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent through 2050 relative to the case without the two effects. The increase is 671, 280, and 143 million tonnes in China, the U.S., and the EU, respectively. The dilution effect causes an increase of 615 million tonnes, and the leakage effect 479 million tonnes. As the plug-in electric vehicle market grows, their super-credits should be gradually withdrawn, and well-to-wheels emissions need to be considered to achieve holistic greenhouse gas emission reductions. Future regulations should be carefully designed to incentivize new technologies while mitigating the risk of increasing emissions elsewhere so that the intent of environmental regulations is not compromised.

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